Iran's military deployed for the first time suicide drone during massive military drills

THINK TANK

Iran's military deployed for the first time suicide drone during massive military drills
Iran's army said Saturday it has deployed a suicide drone for the first time in massive ongoing military drills near the strategic Strait of Hormuz at the entrance to the Persian Gulf, reported Iranian news agency on Saturday, December 27.

An Iran-made Raad-85 Unmanned Aerial Vehicle launched last week during military drills near the Strait of Hormuz​

Gen. Ahmad Reza Pourdastan, the army's chief commander of ground forces, described the unmanned aircraft as a "mobile bomb," according to state media, which said the aerial device is designed to strike air, ground and naval targets.

"The (suicide) drone can be used for hitting the aerial and ground targets and can carry out an attack when it identifies a suspicious target," Commander of the Iranian Army Ground Force Brigadier General Ahmad Reza Pourdastan told reporters on Friday.
"This drone is like a mobile bomb, and is capable of destroying fixed and mobile targets," the commander said at the time.

"These drones can carry heavier payloads compared to the past, and the quality of their optical devices have been also improved," the commander added, describing the drones as the "Ground Force’s upper-hand" in the battle field.

He did not provide the name of the drone. The conservative Kayhan daily referred to it as the Yasir, while an online news website called it the Raad. Officials could not be reached for comment.

The Yasir drone, first unveiled last year, can fly for up to 10 hours and carry out 360-degree imaging, officials said at the time. Western military analysts say the Yasir is a modified version of the American ScanEagle drone. Iran said in December 2012 that it had seized at least three Boeing-designed ScanEagle drones after they allegedly violated its airspace over the Persian Gulf.

Iran is believed to have produced its own remotely piloted suicide drone, the Raad-85, which is designed to crash into targets and set off its warhead.

The six-day military exercise is being carried out over 527,000 square kilometers (850,000 square miles) near the Strait of Hormuz, a narrow waterway through which one-fifth of the world's oil supply passes.

Iran frequently touts advances in its homegrown aerospace industries. It says its most advanced drone, the Shahed-129, can reach much of the Middle East, including Israel. The drone is said to have a range of 1,700 kilometers (1,050 miles) and a 24-hour flight capability, and can carry eight bombs or missiles capable of hitting both stationary and moving targets.

MEMBER

I'm sure Iran and other countries will like to get a hold of this one. Sounds pretty high tech. Can fly for 10 hours. That's along time. and the range is pretty far as well. The future of drones is here. Is it a good thing or a scary one?